Holbein’s Dance of Death

holbein01.jpg

A post for Día de los Muertos. The Internet Archive has several books reprinting the Dance of Death by Hans Holbein the Younger (1497–1543). These samples are from an 1892 edition. There’s also a complete copy of the very rare original printing, Les Simulachres & Historiees Faces De La Mort, Autant Elegamme[n]t Pourtraictes, Que Artificiellement Imaginées (1538), but the reproductions aren’t as good as the later copies. Later this month the Wellcome Collection in London hosts Death: A Self-portrait, an exhibition of memento mori and related art from the Richard Harris collection. They don’t say whether Holbein will be included but I’d be surprised if he wasn’t, these images of popes, kings and paupers being hauled to the grave by grinning skeletons have been reproduced endlessly. For an example of Holbein’s astonishing painting try his portrait of Charles de Solier.

holbein02.jpg

holbein03.jpg

holbein04.jpg

holbein05.jpg

holbein06.jpg

holbein07.jpg

holbein08.jpg

holbein09.jpg

holbein10.jpg

Previously on { feuilleton }
Alfred Rethel’s Totentanz
The Ambassadors in detail
Vanitas paintings

Discover more from { feuilleton }

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading